Autistic States in ChildrenFrances Tustin (1913-1994) was one of the first professionally trained child psychotherapists in Britain. Although internationally recognised for her pioneering therapeutic work with autistic children, her approach is considered by some to be controversial, as her psychogenic view of childhood autism challenged the belief that it is biological and genetic. Autistic States in Children is widely regarded as a vitally important work for understanding the causes of autism in young children. Vividly describing her clinical encounters with autistic children, Tustin argued that autistic states were above all self-protective ones. In her observational studies, she noted how autistic children's interaction with physical objects, such as keys, toy cars, or other play items, had a rigid and ritualistic quality, far removed from the typical kind of fantasy play seen in other children. Such objects are not used by autistic children for their intended purpose, Tustin argued, but rather in sensation-dominated ways that interfere with mental development. She also drew a fundamental distinction between two autistic groups: an ‘encapsulated’ group, which is withdrawn and non-verbal, and an ‘entangled’ group, who are hyperactive and chaotic but have some language. Autistic States in Children influenced not only those in psychotherapy and psychoanalysis but countless others who have contact with autistic children, especially families, and remains essential reading for anyone seeking a creative and compelling understanding of autism. This Routledge Classics edition includes a new Foreword by Maria Rhode. |
From inside the book
Results 1-5 of 33
... birth and psychological catastrophe 10 Autistic objects 11 Confusional objects 12 The asymbolic nature of auto-sensuous states 13 Awareness in autistic states 14 Psychotherapy with autistic states in children 15 Transference phenomena.
... birth and psychological catastrophe' (Chapter 9), where she illustrates some of the terrors that the separateness of being born can hold for children who are not contained in what she calls a 'mental uterus'. Chapter 16, on 'Sam ...
... Birth memories, birth trauma and anxiety.' In Through Paediatrics to Psycho-Analysis, London: Tavistock Publications, pp. 174 – 93. Winnicott, D. W. (1963) 'The mentally ill in your caseload.' In The Maturational Processes and the ...
... birth, an angel presses his finger on our lips, and seals them from retelling of our pasts. That indentation is his finger-print, and it condemns us to repeat our former follies, and to live out once again our human frailty. We must ...
Frances Tustin. and sense of deprivation. Birth in such a situation was unusually traumatic for both mother and baby and precipitated a panic-stricken 'clinch' which, if not modified by subsequent nurturing, would result in the ...
Contents
Autosensuous aspects of psychogenic childhood psychosis | |
Autogenerated encapsulation | |
Autistic objects | |
Confusional objects | |
The asymbolic nature of autosensuous states | |
Awareness in autistic states | |
Psychotherapy with autistic states in children | |
Transference phenomena in autistic states | |
16 | |
Thinkings | |
Confusional entanglement | |
Autosensuousness as a basis for classification of psychogenic childhood psychosis | |
Psychodynamics and treatment of autistic states | |
The pathological operation of autosensuousness | |
Psychological birth and psychological catastrophe | |
The struggles of an autistic child to develop a mind of his | |
Autistic elements in neurotic disorders of childhood | |
Concluding remarks | |
Index | |